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Chapter 6Programming with Objects and Classes
OO Programming Concepts Creating Objects and Object Reference Variables
– Differences between primitive data type and object type– Automatic garbage collection
Constructors Modifiers (public, private and static) Instance and Class Variables and Methods Scope of Variables Use the this Keyword Case Studies (Mortgage class and Count class)
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OO Programming Concepts
data field 1
method n
data field n
method 1
An object
...
...
State
Behavior
Data Field radius = 5
Method findArea
A Circle object
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Class and Objects
circle1: Circle
radius = 2
new Circle()
circlen: Circle
radius = 5
new Circle()
...
UML Graphical notation for classes
UML Graphical notation for objects
Circle radius: double findArea(): double
UML Graphical notation for fields
UML Graphical notation for methods
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Class Declarationclass Circle { double radius = 1.0;
double findArea() { return radius*radius*3.14159; }}
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Declaring Object Reference Variables
ClassName objectName;
Example:Circle myCircle;
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Creating ObjectsobjectName = new ClassName();
Example:myCircle = new Circle();
The object reference is assigned to the object reference variable.
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Declaring/Creating Objectsin a Single Step
ClassName objectName = new ClassName();
Example:Circle myCircle = new Circle();
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Differences between variables of primitive Data types and object types
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c: Circle
radius = 1
Primitive type int i = 1 i
Object type Circle c c reference
Created using new Circle()
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Copying Variables of Primitive Data Types and Object Types
1
c1: Circle
radius = 5
Primitive type assignmenti = j
Before:
i
2j
2
After:
i
2j
Object type assignmentc1 = c2
Before:
c1
c2
After:
c1
c2
c2: Circle
radius = 9
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Garbage Collection As shown in the previous figure, after the assignment statement c1 = c2, c1 points to the same object referenced by c2. The object previously referenced by c1 is no longer useful. This object is known as garbage. Garbage is automatically collected by JVM.
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Garbage Collection, cont
TIP: If you know that an object is no longer needed, you can explicitly assign null to a reference variable for the object. The Java VM will automatically collect the space if the object is not referenced by any variable.
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Accessing Objects Referencing the object’s data: objectName.data myCircle.radius
Invoking the object’s method: objectName.method myCircle.findArea()
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Example 6.1 Using Objects
Objective: Demonstrate creating objects, accessing data, and using methods.
TestCircle Run
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ConstructorsCircle(double r) { radius = r;}
Circle() { radius = 1.0; }
myCircle = new Circle(5.0);
Constructors are a special kind of methods that are invoked to construct objects.
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Constructors, cont.A constructor with no parameters is referred to as a default constructor.
Constructors must have the same name as the class itself.
Constructors do not have a return type—not even void.
Constructors are invoked using the new operator when an object is created. Constructors play the role of initializing objects.
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Example 6.2 Using Constructors
Objective: Demonstrate the role of constructors and use them to create objects.
TestCircleWithConstructors Run
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Visibility Modifiers and Accessor Methods
By default, the class, variable, or data can beaccessed by any class in the same package.
publicThe class, data, or method is visible to any class in any package.
private The data or methods can be accessed only by the declaring class.
The get and set methods are used to read and modify private properties.
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Example 6.3Using the private Modifier
and Accessor Methods
TestCircleWithAccessors Run
In this example, private data are used for the radius and the accessor methods getRadius and setRadius are provided for the clients to retrieve and modify
the radius.
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Passing Objects to Methods
Passing by value (the value is the reference to the object)
Example 6.3 Passing Objects as Arguments
TestPassingObject Run
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Instance Variables, and Methods
Instance variables belong to a specific instance.
Instance methods are invoked by an instance of the class.
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Class Variables, Constants, and Methods
Class variables are shared by all the instances of the class.
Class methods are not tied to a specific object.
Class constants are final variables shared by all the instances of the class.
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Class Variables, Constants, and Methods, cont.
To declare class variables, constants, and methods, use the static modifier.
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Class Variables, Constants, and Methods, cont.
CircleWithStaticVariable -radius -numOfObjects +getRadius(): double +setRadius(radius: double): void +getNumOfObjects(): int +findArea(): double
1 radius circle1:Circle -radius = 1 -numOfObjects = 2
instantiate
instantiate
Memory
2
5 radius
numOfObjects
radius is an instance variable, and numOfObjects is a class variable
UML Notation: +: public variables or methods -: private variables or methods underline: static variables or metods
circle2:Circle -radius = 5 -numOfObjects = 2
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Example 6.5Using Instance and Class Variables
and Method
Objective: Demonstrate the roles of instance and class variables and their uses. This example adds a class variable numOfObjects to track the number of Circle objects created.
Test CircleWithStaticVariable Run
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Scope of Variables
The scope of instance and class variables is the entire class. They can be declared anywhere inside a class.
The scope of a local variable starts from its declaration and continues to the end of the block that contains the variable. A local variable must be declared before it can be used.
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The Keyword this
Use this to refer to the current object. Use this to invoke other constructors of the
object.
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Array of Objects Circle[] circleArray = new Circle[10];
An array of objects is actually an array of reference variables. So invoking circleArray[1].findArea() involves two levels of referencing as shown in the next figure. circleArray references to the entire array. circleArray[1] references to a Circle object.
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Array of Objects, cont.
reference
Circle object 0 circleArray[0]
…
circleArray circleArray[1]
circleArray[9]
Circle object 9
Circle object 1
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Array of Objects, cont. Example 6.6: Summarizing the areas of the
circles Demonstrate the roles of instance and class
variables and their uses. This example adds a class variable numOfObjects to track the number of Circle objects created.
TotalArea Run
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Class Abstraction
Class abstraction means to separate class implementation from the use of the class. The creator of the class provides a description of the class and let the user know how the class can be used. The user of the class does not need to know how the class is implemented. The detail of implementation is encapsulated and hidden from the user.
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Example 6.7 The Mortgage Class
Mortgage
-annualInterestRate: double -numOfYears: int -loanAmount: double +Mortgage() +Mortgage(annualInterestRate: double, numOfYears: int, loanAmount: double) +getAnnualInterestRate(): double +getNumOfYears(): int +getLoanAmount(): double +setAnnualInterestRate(annualInteresteRate: double): void +setNumOfYears(numOfYears: int): void +setLoanAmount(loanAmount: double): void +monthlyPayment(): double +totalPayment(): double
TestMortgageClass
Run
Mortgage
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Example 6.8 The Count Class
Count
Run
TestCount
Count
-count: int -numOfCounts: int +Count() +getCount(): int +setCount(count: int): void +getNumOfCounts(): int +clear(): void +increment(): void +decrement(): void
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Java API and Core Java classes java.lang
Contains core Java classes, such as numeric classes, strings, and objects. This package is implicitly imported to every Java program.
java.awt Contains classes for graphics.
java.applet Contains classes for supporting applets.
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java.io Contains classes for input and outputstreams and files.
java.util Contains many utilities, such as date.
java.net Contains classes for supportingnetwork communications.
Java API and Core Java classes, cont.
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java.awt.image Contains classes for managing bitmap images.
java.awt.peer Platform-specific GUI implementation.
Others:java.sqljava.rmi
Java API and Core Java classes, cont.